Russell & Co.

Variant names
Dates:
Active 1884
Active 1930
Active 1820
Active 1891
Active 1812
Active 1894

History notes:

Perkins & Co. was established in 1803 as a branch of the Boston based merchant trading firm J. & T.H. Perkins & Co., owned by merchant brothers James and Thomas Handasyd Perkins. Perkins & Co. was the premier American firm in China trading silk, tea, and opium. John Perkins Cushing, a Perkins nephew, was partner and head of the China branch until 1827 when he retired leaving Thomas Tunno Forbes, his protege, in charge. Samuel Wadsworth Russell, a native of Middletown, Connecticut also had established himself in China trading silk, tea, and opium. Samuel Wadsworth Russell and Philip Ammidon were partners in the firm Samuel Russell & Co., and while prosperous they did not share the close business association that Cushing had with the powerful Hong merchant Houqua. The untimely death of Forbes in 1829, uncovered a reference in his papers that if anything should happen to him the affairs of Perkins & Co. and Bryant & Sturgis should be looked after by Russell & Co. Cushing was in England at the time of Forbes' death and quickly returned to China to reorganize the business. In 1830 Bryant & Sturgis and Perkins & Co. were merged with Russell & Co. with Augustine Heard as partner and John Murray Forbes as a clerk in the Canton office.

Another American firm, with ties to Boston, operating in China at the time, Russell, Sturgis, & Company, a branch of Russell & Sturgis of Manila, was headed by Warren Delano and Russell Sturgis, later head of the London banking firm Baring, Brothers. The Chinese business affairs of Russell & Sturgis (Russell, Sturgis & Co.) were looked after by John Perkins Cushing. After Cushing departed China, Robert Bennet Forbes, then partner in Russell & Company, coordinated a merger between the Canton branch of Russell & Sturgis and Russell & Co. with Delano becoming a partner in the later in 1840. Russell & Co. continued to trade in silk, tea, porcelain, and to lesser degree opium for the 19th century until it's dissolution in 1891. Many well known China traders worked for or were partners in Russell & Co. including multiple generational members of the Sturgis and Forbes families.

From the guide to the Russell & Co. records, 1820-1891, (Baker Library, Harvard Business School)

Russell and Company was a firm of commission merchants which operated in Canton, China in 1824. Samuel Russell was the principal figure in the firm. Russell and Company took over the business of Perkins and Company. It went out of business in 1891.

From the description of Russell & Co. records, 1820-1891 (inclusive) [microform]. (Harvard Business School). WorldCat record id: 269597416

Trading house founded in 1819 by Samuel Russell of Middletown, Conn., in Guangzhou (Canton), China.

From the description of Russell & Co., Guangzhou, China, records, 1812-1894 (bulk 1819-1840). (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 70981681

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Subjects:

  • Architecture
  • Architecture
  • Banks and banking
  • Cotton manufacture
  • Epilepsy
  • Export marketing
  • Land speculation
  • Marketing
  • Medicine History 19th century
  • Monetary policy
  • Opium trade
  • Architecture

Occupations:

not available for this record

Places:

  • Turkey (as recorded)
  • United States (as recorded)
  • United States (as recorded)
  • Illinois (as recorded)
  • New Jersey (as recorded)
  • Ohio (as recorded)
  • Connecticut--Middletown (as recorded)
  • Kentucky (as recorded)
  • Guangzhou (China) (as recorded)
  • Guangzhou (China) (as recorded)
  • China (as recorded)
  • Michigan (as recorded)
  • China (as recorded)
  • Wisconsin (as recorded)